- Shipyard Railway
The Shipyard Railway was an electric railroad line, rapidly constructed during
World War II to transport workers to and from the Kaiser Shipyards located in the city ofRichmond, California .The Shipyard Railway was built and operated by the
Key System , a local transit company in the East Bay of theSan Francisco Bay Area . The Key System also provided commuter rail service between San Francisco and the East Bay over the Bay Bridge.The Shipyard Railway ran from a specially-constructed depot at 40th Street and
San Pablo Avenue in Emeryville, up San Pablo Avenue northward to Grayson Street in Berkeley then two blocks west to Ninth Street, then a far stretch north along Ninth, across a bridge overCodornices Creek , then diagonally northwest across Albany Village, a federal housing project for war workers, then up and over a specially-constructed trestle above the main line of theSouthern Pacific Railroad and the Eastshore Highway, thence continuing northwest along the bayshore in Richmond, and terminating in a loop line serving the four massive shipyards of Kaiser.The line was built from scrap and available materials, as the war made regular construction materials unavailable. The rails were reused from abandoned streetcar lines. The railroad across the Bay Bridge no longer needed overhead wire, as the Key bridge units operated over the bridge using a third rail and both the Southern Pacific (IER) and
Sacramento Northern Railway had discontinued service. For the trestle over the Southern Pacific Railroad, bridge beams were fashioned out of used Southern Pacific turntables, and timbers were reused from those ferry moles no longer in use due to the Bay Bridge.The
United States Maritime Commission searched and found obsolete New York City "El" elevated cars awaiting scrap. These wood-bodied cars had been built in 1890 for the New York CityIRT Second Avenue Line , initially pulled by steam locomotives and equipped with traction motors and controls prior to 1900. The cars were configured for high-level platforms andthird rail , and were roughly adapted to street operation from overhead wire. The Key System did not possess enough pantographs for every car, so they placed one on eachmarried pair of cars. This too proved challenging, as the celestory roof could not support the weight of a pantograph. Some high level platforms were built, and the Key System's newest cars, "Bridge Units", were operated on the line while a limited number of New York cars were equipped with makeshift steps to street level. These cars became the symbol of the Shipyard Railway.The tracks on Ninth Street used by the Shipyard Railway were formerly the tracks of the Ninth Street Line of the Southern Pacific's transbay Interurban Electric Railway (
East Bay Electric Lines ).At the end of World War II, the Shipyard Railway was offered to the Key System, but they declined, viewing the line as unprofitable. Service ended on September 30, 1945, and the line was quickly dismantled.
Shipyard cars #561 and #563, a married pair, are preserved at the
Western Railway Museum . #561 is restored and is believed to be the oldest operational electric car in the United States. #563 is under restoration.References
* "A Selective History of the Codornices-University Village...with special attention given to the Richmond Shipyard Railway"..., by Warren and Catherine Lee, Imprint (Albuquerque, N.M.): Belvidere Delaware Railroad Company Enterprises, Ltd., (2000)
* "The Key Route", 2v., Harre Demoro, Interurban Press, 1985.
* Rice, Walter, and Echeverria, Emiliano. "The Key System: San Francisco and the Eastshore Empire", Arcadia Publishing, 2007.
External links
* [http://www.keyrailpix.org/gallery2/v/rsrwy/?g2_GALLERYSID=4dd8eb0c7ca05ec834e713218a3583ee Photos of the Shipyard Railway]
* [http://rail.blu-streak.com/galleries/line.php?id=19 Map and Photos of the Richmond Shipyard Railway]
* [http://www.nycsubway.org/lines/2ndave-el.html New York City Second Avenue "El" line]
* [http://world.nycsubway.org/perl/show?73429 Shipyard Railway #561 at the Western Railway Museum]
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